[Hyunjun Go's News]



<Anchor> This



is the time for current affairs critic Koh Hyun-jun to deliver news just for the topic.

What's the first news on Monday?



<Ko Hyun-jun/Current Critic> This



is the news from China.

It is shocking to see the public of middle and high school girls fighting in broad daylight in China.



It is the morning of the 19th.

It is a square in Yilan County, Harbin City, Heilongjiang Province, where more than 30 girls start to gather.




Some of them were even holding a piece of wood, and as soon as they gathered together, they swear words to each other, striking and fighting.



According to a police investigation, two students from different schools in the area had a fight over the place of the local'big sister'.



The police, who were reported and dispatched, arrested 22 people and identified the whereabouts of 14 people, and when the video spread on the Internet, causing controversy, the Chinese education authorities formed a case investigation team claiming that it had a bad influence on society, and punished those involved. Came out.



Two deputy directors of the Yilan County Education Bureau were warned, and two school principals attended by the students were dismissed.

Also, one of the students who led the fight was expelled.



In Chinese society, some point out that violence is rampant in schools all over China and that special measures are needed.



<Anchor>



I am a little curious about what made you fought like that, and what would be better if you become a big sister in the region.

What about the next news?



<Koh Hyeon-jun/Sisa Critic>



This is the next news.

A video letter left by a husband to his wife, who was trapped in a building collapse in western India, is becoming a hot topic.



The image of a man talking while looking at the camera, and tears as if overwhelmed by emotions. On the early morning of the 21st local time, a three-story residential building collapsed in Viwandi near Mumbai, India.




The man in the house avoided himself under the bed, but when he felt that his leg was crushed by a collapsed building column and that it was impossible to escape, he left a video letter to his wife using a cell phone in his hand.



"If I survive, I'll thank God. If I don't survive, I'll say goodbye." Fortunately, the man was rescued dramatically around noon on the day of the accident, but it is said that he lost his younger brother and a 3-year-old son.



The rescued man said he knew where people were trapped, so he went back to the accident site to help the rescue team.The cause of the accident was not yet known, but in India during the monsoon rainy season from June to September, the old structure could not withstand heavy rain. It is said that collapse accidents occur frequently.



<Anchor> It is



said that he lost his younger brother and another son.

I can't even say that I'm glad I was rescued.

Please give us the next news.



<Ko Hyun-jun / Current Affairs Critic>



Today (28th) Last News Recently, on social media, a new type of scam that pretends to be a welfare organization and asks for personal information is on the rise.

Looks like attention is needed.




This is an SNS account with a welfare organization logo and real phone number.

At first glance, it's easy to mistake it for the organization's official account, but it's fake.



The fraudsters hold an event with this account, pretending to be the welfare organization, and require personal information such as mobile phone numbers and social media account passwords to be required to receive a gift saying that they have won the event.



They used their personal information to engage in monetary fraud. As the damage cases continued, welfare organizations such as the Green Umbrella Children's Foundation and the Milal Welfare Foundation have posted notices on their homepages in order to beware of impersonation fraud.



The phishing scam, which has been promoted by welfare organizations, has only recently emerged, and neither the police nor the Korea Internet & Security Agency have been able to accurately identify cases of damage.



Experts urged that welfare organizations generally feel that they are weaker than power agencies such as the police and prosecutors, which phishing scammers tend to promote, so caution can be easily lifted.



<Anchor>



Yes, these fishermen are really making anything unbelievable.